There was one piece of legislation introduced on the Senate floor yesterday in response to the Newtown shootings. It came ahead of any of the legislation from Sen. Dianne Feinstein or Vice President Biden's new commission. It was about video games. Why?

Membership is up, they tell us. People are giving more than usual, they say. We'll be back on Friday, they promised. But what's the truth about America's most powerful interest group after the massacre in Newtown?

Obama was right. On the same day the president said at a press conference that a "majority of Americans support banning the sale of military-style assault weapons" and "high-capacity ammunition clips" a new CNN/ORC International poll finds just that.

In the instant aftermath of the Newtown shooting last Friday, reporters worked to confirm details, investigators looked to investigate leads, misinformation was spread, and conspiracy theories were hatched, but what was happening on Wikipedia?

A Canadian, a Russian, and an American were blasted into space today, destined for the International Space Station. They're sponsored by a pair of Canadian agencies studying the effects of aging on the human body.

The state news agency isn't quite as wrong as when The Onion tricked China's People's Dailyinto believing Kim Jong-un was the Sexiest Man Alive last month. But it doesn't seem to get the difference between Time's Obama pick and 4chan's reader-poll hack.

President Obama will not call for any "specific measures" on gun policy at a joint announcement with Joe Biden at the White House today, but the president will reportedly task the VP with leading an administration-wide review.

Four and a half days after a 20-year-old man carried legal guns into a Connecticut elementary school and killed 20 small children, the National Rifle Association spoke out on the Newtown massacre with a brief statement late Tuesday afternoon.

The Newark mayor might have to buy a website for that not-so-secret Senate run he hasn't announced yet from one of his top advisors. Or maybe they could work out a deal, because the advisor has owned the domain name since 2010.

As with every tragedy that takes place in America these days, it didn't take long for "truthers," racists, and other fringe people to concoct myths about the Sandy Hook massacre that would be laughable if they weren't so offensive.